Skip to main content
Search type Search syntax
Tags [tag]
Exact "words here"
Author user:1234
user:me (yours)
Score score:3 (3+)
score:0 (none)
Answers answers:3 (3+)
answers:0 (none)
isaccepted:yes
hasaccepted:no
inquestion:1234
Views views:250
Code code:"if (foo != bar)"
Sections title:apples
body:"apples oranges"
URL url:"*.example.com"
Saves in:saves
Status closed:yes
duplicate:no
migrated:no
wiki:no
Types is:question
is:answer
Exclude -[tag]
-apples
For more details on advanced search visit our help page
Results tagged with
Search options not deleted user 124549

Linear representations of algebras and groups, Lie theory, associative algebras, multilinear algebra.

4 votes
1 answer
173 views

Group representation with algebra structure

I haven't seen this question in standard textbooks, so I decide to give it a try here. It might relate to deeper structures of certain TQFTs, but I'm not sure. Let $G$ be a finite group. Its finite-di …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
12 votes
3 answers
832 views

Subalgebra of a group algebra

Let $k$ be a field, $G$ a finite group, and $k[G]$ the group algebra. Let $A$ be a subalgebra of $k[G]$. In general, $A$ is not the group algebra of some subgroup $H$ of $G$. Question: Is there any c …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
0 votes

Motivation for the Kazhdan-Lusztig involution

I think it's quite natural. $W$ is built up by simple reflections $s_i$. KL involution is the $\mathbb{Z}$-linear map sending $\delta_{s}$ to $\delta^{-1}_{s^{-1}}$ and $v$ to $v^{-1}$.. you basicall …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
3 votes
0 answers
82 views

Macdonald's idea of his kth weight

This question is about Macdonald's symmetric polynomials theory. Going through related papers and literature, it seems to me that the magical part of his theory lies in how the k-th weight function $\ …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
1 vote
1 answer
139 views

Braided R-matrices for finite action groupoids

1. Algebra from action groupoids Let $G$ be a finite group acting on a finite set $X$ from the right (denoted in element as $x^{g}$). We have an algebra (of the action groupoid) over $\mathbb{C}$: the …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
3 votes
0 answers
145 views

Classical Hecke operators and Hecke algebra of type $A_1$

What's the relation between the classical Hecke operators (as defined in J. P. Serre's A course in arithmetic chapter 6) and the Hecke algebra of type $A_1$, i.e. the algebra generated by the vertices …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
5 votes
1 answer
212 views

Classification of $\operatorname{Rep}D(H)$

Question Let $H$ be a finite dimensional complex Hopf algebra and $D(H)$ its quantum double. Can we classify the simple objects in $\operatorname{Rep}D(H)$ if the representations of $H$ are well-unde …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
7 votes
1 answer
471 views

Combinatorial meaning of Kazhdan-Lusztig-Stanley polynomial

This question is motivated by Why do combinatorial abstractions of geometric objects behave so well? The algebraic geometry of Kazhdan-Lusztig-Stanley polynomials Kazhdan-Lusztig-Stanley polynomial …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
5 votes
1 answer
374 views

Rank of a finite group and its representations

$\DeclareMathOperator\Rep{Rep}\DeclareMathOperator\rank{rank}$Let $G$ be a finite group, and $C=\Rep(G)$ be the monoidal category of complex finite-dimensional representations of $G$. As $C$ is finite …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
6 votes
0 answers
243 views

What do Macdonald polynomials hint about $\operatorname{Rep}(S_\infty)$?

$\DeclareMathOperator\Rep{Rep}$It is well-known that the Macdonald "$P$" polynomials deform the Jack "$J$" polynomials [1]. The latter have profound relations with representation theory. For example, …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
1 vote
1 answer
392 views

Making use of extra symmetries; more examples?

TL; DR. In representation theory, it's nice to decompose a given representation into smaller ones. One technique is by utilizing extra symmetries. Explicit examples come from compact groups, and I won …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
3 votes
0 answers
164 views

Obstruction to delooping

Let $G$ be a finite group. It can be think of as a $1$-category with one object and $|G|$ many morphisms. If $A$ happens to be abelian, then one can think of it to an $n$-category. Conversly, this doe …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
2 votes
0 answers
266 views

Road map: beyond Artin-Wedderburn theorem

For a noncommutative semisimple ring $R$, its structure and its category of representations can be largely understood using Artin-Wedderburn theorem. Such structure theory is useful, for example, in t …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
8 votes
3 answers
516 views

Classification of $\operatorname{Rep} D(G)$

Let $G$ be a finite group and $D(G)$ its quantum double. Its finite dimensional complex representations are classified in this Dijkgraaf et al. Quasi-Quantum Groups Related To Orbifold Models. However …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230
3 votes

Classification of $\operatorname{Rep} D(G)$

This is a study note that spells out @Konstantinos's answer explicitly. Preface Our goal is to classify all finite dimensional representations over the complex number field for the quantum double …
Student's user avatar
  • 5,230

15 30 50 per page